Many entrepreneurs-to-be believe they are just One Good Idea away from really Making It. This is rarely the case. As we’ve so often seen in the corporate world, the early bird rarely gets the worm. Those with innovative ideas will often do the R&D grunt work… and will then be outdone by a better operator.
One way to beat these odds is to create a company culture of Open Innovation: transparently seeking out and incorporating external ideas while also taking care of the wider ecosystem. It will take care of you in return rather than merely copying what works.
Below is a guide to Open Innovation 101, based on my decade-long experience as a strategy consultant.
Open Innovation is part of a larger trend within the Open Business world. This concept has a fairly simple definition: create value through connections. If we go a little more in-depth, Henry Chesbrough (prominent Business Wiz) defines the Open mindset as a division of labor to create greater value, leveraging external ideas and using key assets, resources, or positions not only in the company’s own business but also in other company’s businesses. If that sounds a lot like Ricardo’s ideas on modern capitalism, trust your instincts.
“Openness”, in this context, can be divided into four categories:
Corporate leaders must decide where to position themselves within the above matrix. A few elements can guide them to make the right decision:
These antecedents help determine how much openness is needed, whether limited to R&D or extended across the company. The process of matching the right business model with antecedents is complex but crucial for adapting to market demands and opportunities. This 2014 paper from St Gallen researchers comes hotly recommended for those wanting a deeper dive (though the examples are quite dated by now).
Open Innovation can be used to stimulate the environment rather than for specific questions. In order to gather ideas, 3 steps are necessary :
Open Innovation can be used to solve specific and clearly defined questions. In order to properly scout for innovation, a company needs to :
Open Innovation can be used to directly realize value from innovation with platforms. To make it work, companies need to :
The modern business landscape increasingly leverages the power of collective intelligence, tapping into the creativity and insights of diverse groups through various innovative methods. Seven innovative methods, to be exact.
When an entrepreneur considers creating a business, they tend to think of customers, of products, of funding… but the theory around the business model is often forgotten. It happens organically most times, but there is plenty of value to be garnered by choosing a business model on paper, as it simplifies business decisions down the lines. There are a few that are particularly well-suited to open innovation. If these don’t ring a bell, it may be time to give up on Open Innovation… or go back to business school.
1+1 = 3: Two (or more) companies partner in order to create a unique service or product. The consumer benefits from the combined expertise, and both companies gain access to a new market.
Key attributes:
Outsourcing to the crowd: information or input related to a task or project is generated by enlisting the services of a large number of people, either paid or unpaid, typically via the Internet. Actors are generally offered a small reward for their contribution.
Key attributes:
Multiply competencies outside your core business: internally developed expertise, as well as any other high-value assets, are offered to other companies who could benefit from it. This allows the company to produce revenues from unused resources, thus diversifying revenue streams and enhancing the core value proposition.
Key attributes:
Leverage collaborative value creation: Open business is an approach to an enterprise that draws on ideas from openness movements like free software, open source, open content, and open tools and standards. The approach places value on transparency, stakeholder inclusion, and accountability. Collaboration with partners in the ecosystem becomes a central source of value creation, thus benefiting all actors.
Key attributes:
Working together to create a free solution: the core of the offer (usually source code) is made freely available to anyone wishing to use it. As such, it can be contributed to (encouraged), or simply used as a customer would. A company can earn revenues by providing complementary services, such as consulting and support. However, it usually benefits more from becoming an industry standard and the image boost that comes with it.
Key attributes:
Taking lessons from competitors: this pattern refers to the reproduction of another company’s product following a detailed examination of its construction or composition. As this system requires little investment in research or development, the ensuing products can be offered at a lower price than the original one.
Key attributes:
Learning from good-enough solutions: Simple and cheap offers developed for emerging markets are imported and sold in developed economies. These offers are often innovative as they were created in a world largely untethered by complex infrastructures.
Key attributes:
Put the community to use: Customers use media to share and purchase products, abandoning entirely the confines of the brand control environment. The company benefits from potential virality and network effects, while customers are able to receive targeted messages tailored to their interests.
Key attributes:
Any entrepreneur trying to add elements of Open Innovation into their company is on the right path to success, that much is true. There are however a few things one needs to be wary of to ensure success.
Intellectual property is at stake ever time an innovation is undertaken. Still, having IP on top of your mind can create barriers to Open Innovation.
With different actors from different companies, the motivations are different. Understanding those motivations and leveraging them is key.
In an open business model, new partners are necessary to a greater value creation and capture. Be ready to welcome them.
Startups that fully commit to an open innovation mindset — balancing the protection of intellectual property with openness — are better positioned to harness collective creativity and adapt to market changes.
Ultimately, Open Innovation can turn what may seem like a solitary entrepreneurial journey into a cooperative venture with limitless possibilities.
Good luck out there.